ac2c01138_si_001.pdf (835.58 kB)
Download fileNH3 Plasma Functionalization of UiO-66-NH2 for Highly Enhanced Selective Fluorescence Detection of U(VI) in Water
journal contribution
posted on 23.06.2022, 20:29 authored by Jiali Liu, Xianbiao Wang, Yangyang Zhao, Yongfei Xu, Yang Pan, Shaojie Feng, Jin Liu, Xianhuai Huang, Huanting WangRadioactive U(VI) in nuclear wastewater
is a global environmental
pollutant that poses a great threat to human health. Therefore, it
is of great significance to develop a U(VI) sensor with desirable
sensitivity and selectivity. Inspired by electron-donating group modification
for enhancement of binding affinity toward U(VI), we report an amine
group functionalization of UiO-66-NH2, using a low-cost,
environmentally friendly, and low-temperature NH3 plasma
technique as a fluorescence switching nanoprobe for highly sensitive
and selective detection of U(VI). The resulting amine-functionalized
UiO-66-NH2 (LTP@UiO-66-NH2) shows dramatically
enhanced fluorescence emission and selective sensitivity for U(VI)
on the basis of the quenching effect. The quenching efficiency increases
from 58 to 80% with the same U(VI) concentration (17.63 μM)
after NH3 plasma functionalization. As a result, the LTP@UiO-66-NH2 has the best Ksv (1.81 ×
105 M–1, 298 K) and among the lowest
LODs (0.08 μM, 19.04 ppb) compared with those reported in the
literature. Intraday and interday precision and application in real
environment experiments indicate stable and accurate U(VI) detection
performance. Fluorescence lifetime and temperature-dependent detection
experiments reveal that the quenching mechanism belongs to the static
quenching interaction. The highly selective fluorescence detection
is attributed to the selective binding of U(VI) by the rich functionalized
amine groups of LTP@UiO-66-NH2. This work provides an efficient
fluorescence probe for highly sensitive U(VI) detection in water,
and a new strategy of tailored plasma functionalization for developing
a practical MOF sensor platform for enhanced fluorescence emission,
sensitivity, and selectivity for detecting trace amounts of radioactive
species in the environment.
History
Usage metrics
Read the peer-reviewed publication
Categories
Keywords
global environmental pollutantdonating group modificationdetecting trace amounts81 × 10static quenching interactionquenching mechanism belongsquenching efficiency increasesfluorescence switching nanoprobeenhanced fluorescence emissionefficient fluorescence probesv </ sub3 </ sub2 </ subamine group functionalizationtailored plasma functionalization5 </ supu ( viplasma functionalizationk </quenching effectfluorescence lifetimeresulting amine>< subplasma techniquework providesselective bindingradioactive speciesnuclear wastewaternew strategylowest lodsinterday precisionhuman healthhighly sensitivegreat threatgreat significanceenvironmentally friendly63 μm08 μm04 ppb